WASHINGTON — A House panel says credit-rating agencies and federal regulators contributed to MF Global’s collapse last year. But it pinned most of the blame on ex-chief executive Jon Corzine.

The report issued Thursday by the House Financial Services Oversight and Investigations subcommittee found that Corzine’s risky strategies caused the brokerage firm’s failure. That largely reiterated a statement released Wednesday by the committee’s Republicans.

Democrats on the panel did not endorse the report’s findings.

MF Global was forced to seek bankruptcy protection last year, the eighth-largest in U.S. history. More than $1 billion in customer money went missing. Corzine, a Democratic former U.S. senator and governor of New Jersey, stepped down as CEO in November 2011.

Still, the House panel said in its report that rating agencies Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s failed to identify the biggest risk: MF Global’s $6.3 billion bet on European countries’ debt.

And it noted that the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission failed to share important information about the firm with each other. The regulators have oversight authority for MF Global.

More than a third of Americans in a new national survey said they think the heightened focus on diversity at work has overlooked white men. Meanwhile, 32 percent of male respondents, meanwhile, reported feeling “personally excluded” in the office.

An unprecedented $350 million worth of commercial projects broke ground along the I-25 corridor in Thornton in 2017, city economic development officials say. There is little reason to think the flood of development will stop any time soon, and neighbors Westminister